Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 129 - STUDENT ATTENDANCE
Subchapter BB - COMMISSIONER'S RULES CONCERNING TRUANCY
Section 129.1045 - Best Practics
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 129.1045
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) A school district shall consider the following best practices for truancy prevention measures.
(1) Develop an attendance policy
that clearly outlines requirements related to truancy in accordance with Texas
Education Code (TEC), Chapter 25, Subchapter C, and communicate this
information to parents at the beginning of the school year.
(2) Create a culture of attendance that
includes training staff to talk meaningfully with students and parents about
the attendance policy and the root causes of unexcused absences.
(3) Create incentives for perfect attendance
and improved attendance.
(4)
Educate students and their families on the positive impact of school attendance
on performance.
(5) Provide
opportunities for students and parents to address causes of absence and/or
truancy with district staff and link families to relevant community programs
and support.
(6) Develop
collaborative partnerships, including planning, referral, and cross-training
opportunities, between appropriate school staff, attendance officers,
program-related liaisons, and external partners such as court representatives,
community and faith-based organizations, state or locally funded community
programs for truancy intervention or prevention, and law enforcement to assist
students.
(7) Determine root causes
of unexcused absences and review campus- and district-level data on unexcused
absences to identify systemic issues that affect attendance.
(8) Use existing school programs such as
Communities In Schools, 21st Century Community Learning Centers, Restorative
Discipline, and Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS) to provide
students and their parents with services.
(9) At the beginning of each school year,
conduct a needs assessment and identify and list, or map, services and programs
available within the school district and the community that a school, a
student, or a student's parent or guardian may access to address the student's
barriers to attendance and make the information available to staff, students,
and parents. The information must include, but is not limited to:
(A) services for pregnant and parenting
students;
(B) services for students
experiencing homelessness;
(C)
services for students in foster care;
(D) federal programs including, but not
limited to, Title 1, Part A, of the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act;
(E) state programs including,
but not limited to, State Compensatory Education programs;
(F) dropout prevention programs and programs
for "at risk" youth;
(G) programs
that occur outside of school time;
(H) counseling services;
(I) tutoring programs and services available
at no or low cost;
(J) mental
health services;
(K) alcohol and
substance abuse prevention and treatment programs;
(L) mentoring programs and
services;
(M) juvenile justice
services and programs;
(N) child
welfare services and programs;
(O)
other state or locally funded programs for truancy prevention and intervention;
and
(P) other supportive services
that are locally available for students and families through faith-based
organizations, local governments, and community-based organizations.
(10) After identifying and
listing, or mapping, services available in the district and community, school
districts should target any new resources, programs, or services to gaps in
services identified during the needs assessment.
(11) School districts should ensure that
personnel, including truancy prevention facilitators or juvenile case managers,
attendance officers, McKinney-Vento liaisons, foster care liaisons, Title IX
coordinators, 504 coordinators, pregnancy and parenting coordinators, dropout
prevention coordinators, special education staff, and other appropriate student
services personnel, meet to contribute to the needs assessment, discuss
opportunities to work together, and identify strategies to coordinate both
internally and externally to address students' attendance barriers.
(b) In determining services offered to students identified in TEC, § 25.0915(a-3), a school district shall consider:
(1)
offering an optional flexible school day program and evening and online
alternatives;
(2) working with
businesses that employ students to help students coordinate job and school
responsibilities; and
(3) offering
before school, after school, and/or Saturday prevention or intervention
programs or services that implement best and promising practices.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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